Israel’s History – a Picture a Day – For Tu B’Shvat (Jewish New Year for Trees), a Picture of Jewish Soldiers in the British Army, WWI
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- For Tu B’Shvat (Jewish New Year for Trees), a Picture of Jewish Soldiers in the British Army, WWI
- On Tu B’Shvat, Give Credit to the Jewish National Fund, the “Yoni Appleseed” of the Land of Israel
- Tu B’Shvat, the Jewish New Year for Trees, Is Celebrated on Saturday
Posted: 08 Feb 2017
Tu B’Shvat, the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Shvat, is a date assigned thousands of years ago in the Mishna for the purposes of determining the age of a tree and its tithing requirements. Indeed, the date usually coincides with the first blossoms on the almond trees in Israel.
Today, Tu B’Shvat is commemorated as a combination of Arbor Day, environment-protection day, a kibbutz agricultural holiday, and, of course, a day for school outings and plantings.
The above picture of Jewish soldiers of the British Army who fought in Palestine in World War I was taken on Tu B’Shvatin 1919. One Legionnaire, Leon Cheifetz from Montreal who enlisted before the age of 18, assembled an album with dozens of pictures and biographies of many of the Canadians who fought with him.
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Posted: 08 Feb 2017 09:11 AM PST
For more than 100 years, Jewish families around the world kept a blue metal charity box in their homes to collect pennies to buy trees in the Holy Land. School children would bring to school dimes to buy leaf stickers in order to pay for a tree. |
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Posted: 08 Feb 2017 08:33 AM PST
Reposting Tu B’Shvat features from February 1912.
One major activity of the JNF, or in Hebrew the Keren Kayemet LeYisrael, was the planting of trees on Jewish-owned land in Palestine. Many a Jewish home had the iconic JNF blue charity box, or pushke, in order to buy trees. In its history, the JNF is responsible for planting almost a quarter of a billion trees. The photographers of the American Colony recorded the JNF’s efforts.
The day chosen for school children and volunteers to go out to the fields and barren hilltops to plant trees was Tu B’Shvat, the 15th day of the Hebrew month of Shvat, a date assigned thousands of years ago in the Mishna for the purposes of determining the age of a tree and its tithing requirements.
Indeed, the date usually coincides with the first blossoms on the almond trees in Israel.
Today, Tu B’Shvat is commemorated as a combination of Arbor Day, environment-protection day, a kibbutz agricultural holiday, and, of course, a day for school outings and plantings. Postscript
In 1935, the Jews of Britain and the JNF established a “Jubilee Forest” near Nazareth. According to the Jewish Telegraph Agency’s account at the time, an “oriental cypress tree presented by King George V of England to the Jubilee Forest in the hills of Nazareth will be formally planted by High Commissioner Sir Arthur Grenfell Wauchope on December 19.” “The Jubilee Forest is British Jewry’s mark of loyalty and devotion to the throne, expressed on the occasion of the royal couple’s twenty-fifth jubilee. It will cover a large area of desolate and barren land on the hills of Nazareth which in ancient times were famed for their forest beauty. The forest constitutes the most important effort in reforestation of the Holy Land.”
“The tree shipped by King George was removed from Windsor Great Park in London, where it was the only one of its kind. It is the first ever to have been shipped from England to Palestine.”
Next feature: 100 year old pictures of the trees of the Land of Israel
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